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Allá en el Rancho Grande (English: Out on the Great Ranch) is a 1936 Mexican romantic drama film directed and co-written by Fernando de Fuentes and starring Tito Guízar and Esther Fernández. The film is considered to be the one that started the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.
"Allá en el Rancho Grande" is a Mexican song. It was written in the 1920s for a musical theatrical work, but now is most commonly associated with the eponymous 1936 Mexican motion picture Allá en el Rancho Grande, [1] in which it was sung by renowned actor and singer Tito Guízar [2] and with mariachis.
One of the first blockbusters was the film Allá en el Rancho Grande by Fernando de Fuentes, which became the first classic of Mexican cinema; this film is referred to as the initiator of the "Mexican film industry". [3] In the early 1940s began the emergence of great Mexican film studios located in Mexico City. They began to support the mass ...
Fernando de Fuentes Carrau (December 13, 1894 – July 4, 1958) was a Mexican film director, considered a pioneer in the film industry worldwide.He is perhaps best known for directing the films El prisionero trece, El compadre Mendoza, and Vámonos con Pancho Villa, all part of his Revolution Trilogy on the Mexican Revolution.
Allá en el Rancho Grande: Fernando de Fuentes: Tito Guízar, Esther Fernández: Golden Age of Mexican Cinema No te engañes corazón: Miguel Contreras Torres: Cantinflas, Carlos Orellana, Sara García, Estanislao Schillinsky: First Cantinflas film Irma la mala: Raphael J. Sevilla: Pedro Armendáriz, Adriana Lamar, Ramón Pereda: María Elena ...
The Golden Age of Mexican cinema began in 1936 with the premiere of Allá en el Rancho Grande, and ended in 1956. [20] During the 1940s the full potential of the industry developed. Actors and directors became popular icons and even figures with political influence on diverse spheres of Mexican life.
His first feature, Allá en el Rancho Grande (1936), which would become one of the most popular films in Mexico and Latin America, and is considered to be the one that started the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, gained international recognition when it won a prize at the Venice Film Festival and broke box-office records. [3] [18] [19]
Ignacio Pérez Meza, better known as Luis Pérez Meza [2] or El Trovador del Campo (22 May 1917 – 9 June 1981) was a Mexican singer, boxer and actor. He was a singer of banda and ranchera music, he also appeared in several films of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema .